Awaiting the Already: An Advent Journey Through the Gospels
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Each Gospel, in its own way, leads us on the Advent journey of preparation for Christ’s coming. Awaiting the Already, originally released in 2015, takes a tour through the four Gospel narratives that announce Christ’s birth or make way for his ministry. Readers will discover what parts of the Christmas story come from which Gospel, recognizing an invitation from each Gospel writer to prepare for a fresh experience of Christ in the past and the future.
This thematic Bible study is designed to be used by individuals and small groups during Advent. In addition to the main content, each chapter offers questions for reflection and discussion, a brief prayer, and a focus for the week. The weekly focus emerges from the chapter content and encourages the readers to engage a spiritual practice or do something specific that will help them grow in faith. The thematic seasonal Bible study series is designed for transformation and for applying the study of the Bible to everyday, practical life experience. It is intended to nurture and encourage faith development and spiritual growth during the season of Advent.
Magrey deVega
Magrey R. deVega is the Senior Pastor at Hyde Park United Methodist Church in Tampa, Florida. He is the author of several books, including The Bible Year, Savior, Almost Christmas, Embracing the Uncertain, One Faithful Promise, and Songs for the Waiting. Magrey is a graduate of United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, and Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida, and the father of two daughters, Grace and Madelyn.
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Awaiting the Already - Magrey deVega
First Week of Advent
MARK
John the Baptist
Slow Down, Pay Attention
READ: MARK 1:1-8
There is nothing about the Gospel of Mark that is slow. It moves along at a brisk clip, covering the necessary details of Jesus’ life like a sports highlight reel. Mark’s favorite word is immediately or straightaway: The Greek word for immediately occurs forty-one times in Mark, three times as much as the other three Gospels combined. The rest of Mark’s writing style shows his concern for haste too. Whereas Matthew and Luke fill their Gospels with more of Jesus’ teachings, and John is replete with poetic flourish and vivid imagery, Mark is all about action.
It’s the shortest of the Gospels, and widely regarded to be the first one written. That’s why we will consider it here first, rather than Matthew. Mark’s version broke into the scene and formed the basis for the later Gospel portraits of Jesus. So to do a comprehensive survey of the four accounts of Jesus’ birth, it is best to start here and see what Mark has to say about the birth of Jesus. And it turns out that Mark says . . . nothing.
It might be odd that for an event as significant in human history as the Incarnation of God’s own Son, the earliest portrait we have of it is like a blank canvas. There are no angels, no shepherds, no mention of Mary or Joseph, no star, and no manger. Instead, when we first meet Jesus in the Gospel’s ninth verse, he is already a grown man.
So why include Mark in this four-dimensional portrait of Advent? Because this Gospel—this brisk, fast-paced, action-packed thriller of a Gospel—begins in a way that is not only unique among the four Gospels. It leads with a message that is quintessentially Advent.
Mark begins right off the bat with John the Baptist. Matthew and Luke don’t talk about John’s ministry until their respective third chapters. The Book of John reports John the Baptist’s ministry only after a lengthy, poetic discourse about Jesus. But Mark? He begins with a starter’s pistol, a firecracker, a voice from the wilderness that begins the story in the most attention-grabbing, eye-catching way.
It is as if Mark, with pen and paper in hand, is writing the equivalent of police sirens and flashing lights. He wants to get your attention.
Slow Down, Pay Attention
One day after I picked up my two daughters from school, we headed over to run some errands in a city about an hour away. The girls settled in the back seat for the long drive, watching a movie on their movie player, while I spent the time working through the myriad of items on my mental checklist: follow-up work on Commitment Sunday, preparations for a big upcoming funeral, Advent starting the upcoming Sunday—all in a shortened work week. Check, check, check.
I don’t know how long I had been driving before I noticed the flashing blue and red lights. When the officer approached me, I still had no idea why I had been pulled over.
Do you know how fast you were going?
he asked me. Well, that answered why he had pulled me over. I thought about saying, You have no idea how fast I’ve been moving today.
I wanted to show him my to-do list, my day planner, and my e-mail inbox. Take a radar gun to that, I thought to myself.
When he told me how fast I was going, I knew there was no squirming out of it. My older daughter Grace, who was only seven at the time, looked up from her movie to notice what was happening and frantically asked:
DADDY, IS HE GOING TO TAKE YOU TO JAIL?
The officer chuckled and took my license back to the squad car, as I said to her, Don’t give him any ideas.
Of course, speeding was just a symptom of the deeper problem. I had become absorbed by the world inside my head instead of focusing on the road. And it took flashing lights and a badge to shock me back to reality.
This is what Mark’s Advent narrative offers for us. In a Gospel that would become very fast moving, and to an audience that would be moving even faster, John the Baptist bursts onto the scene as a voice crying in the wilderness, as sirens blaring in the rear view mirror, to get us to pay attention, slow down, and change our behavior.
You and I enter the Advent season every year with nearly the same mentality.
•We live in an artificial world of our own construction, rather than a world that invites us into the mysteries of faith and trust.
•We’re stuck in a pressurized world of deadlines and instantaneous results, rather than a lifelong commitment to gradual maturity.
•We’re speeding through a world jaded by cynicism and worry, instead of embracing a world of imagination and possibility.
•We might even say we’re not quite ready for Christmas or Advent yet. And that’s precisely the point. We’re not ready for God to break into our lives, because we are too busy living in our own self-made world.
•And when we think we are ready for Advent, we jump right to the good stuff, the stuff in Matthew, Luke, and John. We’d prefer placid scenes of hillside shepherds, starry nights, and lowing cattle. We cling to these images because they offer us a kind of anesthetizing nostalgia back to days before life became so chaotic and so confusing.
The last thing we want—and the last thing we expect—is an Advent message from Mark. And there’s a reason that the message of John the Baptist can be found in the second week of Advent every year, no matter what lectionary year we’re on in the church.
These words read like flashing blue and red lights in your rear view mirror. Pull over! Keep alert! Snap out of it! You’re drifting off into a different reality rather than the one that is set before you.
They grab our attention in order to recalibrate us toward what is most important about the season. Get ready for the Messiah. Change your behavior. And ask God for